GST on Spices & Condiments — Loose 0%, Packaged 5%, Pickles 12%
Complete GST guide for spices & condiments: whole spices (loose) 0% exempt, packaged spices 5%, masala powders 5%, pickles/chutneys 12%, sauces 12%, salt 0% exempt, edible oils 5%, tea/coffee 5%, mayonnaise 18%, and vinegar 18%.
Nil
Unbranded Whole Spices
5%
Branded/Packaged Spices
5%
Spice Powder (branded)
5%
Mixed Masala Powder
12%
Pickles & Chutneys
12%
Sauces (Ketchup etc.)
18%
Curry Paste (packaged)
18%
Vinegar
Spices & Condiments — GST Framework
Whole Spices — Raw & Unprocessed — NIL/5% GST
UNBRANDED WHOLE SPICES — NIL (0%): Whole spices sold loose/unpackaged: 0% (agricultural produce). Turmeric (whole/fresh): 0%. Chilli (dried, whole): 0%. Black pepper (whole): 0%. Cardamom (elaichi): 0%. Cinnamon (dalchini) sticks: 0%. Cloves (laung): 0%. Cumin (jeera) seeds: 0%. Coriander (dhania) seeds: 0%. Mustard seeds: 0%. Fenugreek (methi) seeds: 0%. Star anise: 0%. Nutmeg (jaiphal): 0%. Mace (javitri): 0%. Bay leaves (tej patta): 0%. Fennel (saunf): 0%. Ajwain (carom seeds): 0%. Tamarind (imli): 0%. Saffron (kesar): 0%. Asafoetida (hing) raw: 0%. BRANDED/PACKAGED WHOLE SPICES — 5%: Pre-packaged and labelled whole spices: 5% (HSN 0904-0910). Brands like MDH, Everest, Catch selling whole spices in packets: 5%. This distinction was critical change in July 2022: Before July 2022: branded = 5%, unbranded = 0%. After July 2022: 'pre-packaged and labelled' (as per Legal Metrology Act) = 5%. Even small local brand selling in sealed packet with weight declaration: 5%. FRESH SPICES: Fresh ginger: 0% (vegetable). Fresh turmeric (raw): 0%. Fresh green chillies: 0%. Fresh curry leaves: 0%. Fresh coriander (dhania): 0% (herb/vegetable). DRIED SPICES (Single-ingredient): Dried ginger (sonth): 0% (loose) / 5% (packaged). Dried chilli flakes: 0% (loose) / 5% (packaged). Black pepper crushed: 5% (processed — changes form). SAFFRON (Special case): Indian saffron (Kashmir): 0% (loose) / 5% (packaged). Extremely high value (₹2-5 lakh/kg). Even at 0%: no significant revenue loss (tiny volume). Used in medicines, food, cosmetics. Adulteration is major issue (not a GST concern but FSSAI). INDIA'S SPICE INDUSTRY: World's largest producer, consumer, and exporter of spices. Spice Board of India regulates exports. Export value: ₹30,000+ crore/year. Major export destinations: USA, China, UAE, UK, Saudi Arabia. Exports: 0% GST (zero-rated supply under IGST). Exporters claim refund on input GST (shipping, packaging, processing).
Spice Powders & Masalas — 5% GST
SINGLE SPICE POWDERS — 5%: Turmeric powder (haldi): 5% (HSN 0910). Chilli powder (lal mirch): 5% (HSN 0904). Coriander powder (dhania): 5% (HSN 0909). Cumin powder (jeera): 5% (HSN 0910). Black pepper powder (kali mirch): 5%. Ginger powder (adrak/sonth): 5%. Garlic powder: 5%. Cinnamon powder: 5%. BLENDED MASALA POWDERS — 5%: Garam masala: 5% (HSN 0910). Sambar powder: 5%. Rasam powder: 5%. Biryani masala: 5%. Chicken masala: 5%. Fish masala: 5%. Chaat masala: 5%. Pav bhaji masala: 5%. Chole masala: 5%. Kitchen king masala: 5%. Meat masala: 5%. Paneer masala: 5%. ALL mixed masalas: 5% (same classification). WHY 5% (Not 12% or 18%)? Spices are essential food items in Indian cooking. Every Indian household uses masala daily. Political impossibility to tax at higher rate. 5% represents government's 'essential but processed' category. BRANDED MASALA COMPANIES: MDH (now part of merged entity): 5%. Everest: 5%. Catch: 5%. Eastern: 5%. MTR: 5% (masala powders). Badshah: 5%. Aachi: 5%. Sakthi: 5%. Priya: 5%. READY-TO-COOK MASALA PASTE: Ginger-garlic paste: 5% (HSN 0910 or 2103). Curry paste (ready-made): 18% (HSN 2103 — 'preparations for sauces'). Green chilli paste: 5%. Tamarind paste: 5% (fruit-based). CLASSIFICATION DISPUTE — PASTE vs POWDER: Dry masala powder: 5% (clearly Chapter 9). Wet masala paste: Could be 5% (Chapter 9 — spice preparation). Or 18% (Chapter 21 — food preparation/sauce). AARs have given mixed rulings. General principle: If it's ONLY spices + water (no other ingredients): 5%. If it contains oil, preservatives, added ingredients: 18% (food preparation). ORGANIC SPICES: Same GST rate regardless of organic certification. Organic turmeric powder: 5%. Organic garam masala: 5%. Organic certification doesn't change HSN classification. Premium pricing doesn't affect GST rate. ITC FOR SPICE MANUFACTURERS: Agricultural procurement (whole spices from farmers): 0% → no ITC. Processing (grinding, mixing): adds value. Packaging material: 18% → ITC available. Output (branded masala): 5%. Inverted duty: Packaging (18%) → Output (5%) = ITC accumulation. Refund of accumulated ITC: Available for spice companies (inverted duty). Major spice companies regularly claim inverted duty refunds.
Pickles, Chutneys & Preserves — 12% GST
PICKLES — 12%: Mango pickle (aam ka achar): 12% (HSN 2001). Lime/lemon pickle: 12%. Mixed vegetable pickle: 12%. Chilli pickle: 12%. Garlic pickle: 12%. Amla (gooseberry) pickle: 12%. Non-veg pickle (fish, prawn, chicken): 12%. Gongura pickle: 12%. All Indian pickles (achar): 12%. CHUTNEYS — 12%: Mint chutney (packaged): 12% (HSN 2103). Tamarind chutney: 12%. Coconut chutney (packaged): 12%. Tomato chutney: 12%. Coriander chutney (bottled): 12%. Imli (tamarind) chutney: 12%. MURABBA — 12%: Amla murabba: 12% (HSN 2006 — preserved fruits). Carrot murabba: 12%. Apple murabba: 12%. Gulkand (rose petal preserve): 12%. SAUCES — 12%: Tomato ketchup: 12% (HSN 2103). Tomato sauce: 12%. Chilli sauce (Schezwan): 12%. Soy sauce: 12% (HSN 2103). Hot sauce (Tabasco): 12%. Worcestershire sauce: 12%. Fish sauce: 12%. Oyster sauce: 12%. Barbecue sauce: 12%. Mustard sauce (prepared): 12%. MAYONNAISE — 18%: Mayonnaise: 18% (HSN 2103 — specific entry). Why higher? Classified as 'emulsified sauce' → different from simple sauces. Contains egg/oil as primary ingredients (not spice-based). All creamy/emulsified sauces: 18%. VINEGAR — 18%: All vinegar: 18% (HSN 2209). Apple cider vinegar: 18%. White vinegar: 18%. Balsamic vinegar: 18%. Wine vinegar: 18%. Synthetic vinegar: 18%. MUSTARD (Prepared) — 12%: Prepared mustard (paste): 12% (HSN 2103). Dijon mustard: 12%. Kasundi (Bengali mustard): 12%. DIPS & SPREADS: Hummus: 18% (food preparation — HSN 2106). Salsa: 12% (sauce classification). Guacamole: 18% (food preparation). Pesto: 18% (food preparation — contains oil, nuts, cheese). PAPAD & ACCOMPANIMENTS: Papad: 0% (exempt — all varieties). Appalam: 0%. Fryums (shaped starch products): 18% (disputed — not papad). HOMEMADE vs COMMERCIAL: Women SHGs selling homemade pickle: If turnover < ₹40 lakh: no GST registration needed. If packaged & labelled per Legal Metrology: 12% (if registered). Government scheme pickles (MUDRA loan beneficiaries): same GST rate (no concession). COTTAGE INDUSTRY: Pickle/papad making under PMEGP/KVIC: Same GST rates apply (no sector exemption). But: most cottage units below threshold → practically exempt.
Salt, Cooking Oil & Condiments — 0-5% GST
SALT — 0% (Exempt): Common salt (table salt): 0% (HSN 2501). Iodized salt: 0%. Rock salt (sendha namak): 0%. Black salt (kala namak): 0%. Sea salt: 0%. Pink salt (Himalayan): 0%. ALL edible salt: 0% (essential commodity). Industrial salt (for chemicals): 5%. WHY SALT IS EXEMPT: Constitutional provision — salt was historically a political issue (Gandhi's salt march). Essential food item — consumed by all income groups. Zero nutritional distinction between cheap and premium salt. Even 'premium' Himalayan pink salt: 0% (if sold as food salt). But: Bath salt (cosmetic use): 18% (not food). COOKING OIL — 5%: Mustard oil: 5% (HSN 1514). Groundnut oil: 5% (HSN 1508). Coconut oil (edible): 5% (HSN 1513). Sunflower oil: 5% (HSN 1512). Soybean oil: 5% (HSN 1507). Rice bran oil: 5% (HSN 1515). Sesame/gingelly oil (til): 5% (HSN 1515). Palm oil (edible): 5% (HSN 1511). Olive oil: 5% (HSN 1509). Canola/rapeseed oil: 5%. Corn oil: 5%. Safflower oil: 5%. Blended oil: 5%. Vanaspati (hydrogenated): 5%. Ghee (cow/buffalo): 5% (HSN 0405). Butter: 5% (HSN 0405). UNBRANDED/LOOSE OIL: Loose edible oil: 0% (if not pre-packaged). Oil sold in loose from drums: 0% (unprocessed agricultural). But: Most oil is packaged → 5%. July 2022 change brought packaged oil from 0% to 5%. COCONUT OIL — CLASSIFICATION DISPUTE: Coconut oil ≤ 1 litre pack: 0% (considered hair oil / personal care? NO). Edible coconut oil (any size): 5% (HSN 1513 — edible). Parachute coconut oil: 5% (food) or 18% (cosmetic)? Company claims it's edible oil: 5%. Revenue says: it's marketed as hair oil: 18%. Multiple litigations — brand positioning matters! SPICE OILS & OLEORESINS: Pepper oleoresin: 5% (spice extract). Turmeric oleoresin: 5%. Chilli oleoresin: 5%. These are used in food processing industry. Export of oleoresins: 0% (zero-rated). India is world's largest oleoresin exporter. EDIBLE OIL ITC: Oil refinery: buys crude oil (5%) → refines → sells (5%). ITC fully available (same rate in and out). Oil manufacturer claiming ITC on: Oilseeds purchased (0% — agricultural): no ITC. Processing machinery: 18% → ITC available. Packaging: 18% → ITC available. Inverted duty: Not typically an issue (output is also 5%). CONDIMENTS — VARIOUS RATES: Tomato paste/puree: 12% (HSN 2002). Curry powder (not masala — Western style): 5%. MSG (Ajinomoto): 18% (food additive). Food colours: 18%. Flavour essences: 18%. Baking powder: 18%. Yeast: 12%. Corn flour/starch: 18% (HSN 1108). Custard powder: 18%.
Tea, Coffee & Beverages — 5-18% GST
TEA — 5%: Tea leaves (green/black, processed): 5% (HSN 0902). Tea bags: 5%. Loose tea (packaged): 5%. Premium Darjeeling/Assam tea: 5%. Organic tea: 5%. Herbal tea (containing actual tea leaves): 5%. Green tea: 5%. White tea: 5%. Oolong tea: 5%. Matcha powder: 5%. CTC tea: 5%. Dust tea: 5%. TEA — UNPROCESSED: Fresh tea leaves (from garden to factory): 0% (agricultural produce). This is raw leaf supplied to processing factory. Once processed (dried, fermented): 5%. TEA BEVERAGES (Ready-to-drink): Iced tea (bottled — Lipton, Nestea): 18% (aerated/flavoured drink). Tea premix (vending machine): 18% (preparation). COFFEE — 5%: Coffee beans (roasted): 5% (HSN 0901). Ground coffee: 5%. Instant coffee (Nescafé, Bru): 5%. Coffee powder: 5%. Filter coffee powder: 5%. Green coffee beans: 5%. Chicory blend coffee: 5%. COFFEE — HIGHER RATES: Coffee premix (3-in-1 sachet): 18% (contains sugar, creamer — 'food preparation'). Cold coffee (bottled, ready-to-drink): 18%. Coffee shots/concentrates: 18%. Starbucks bottled frappuccino: 18%. CAFÉ vs HOME COFFEE: Coffee from café/restaurant: 5% (restaurant service). Packaged coffee beans/powder for home: 5% (goods). Coffee machine (DeLonghi, Nespresso): 18% (equipment). Coffee capsules (Nespresso pods): 18% (food preparation, not plain coffee). HERBAL/NON-TEA BEVERAGES: Herbal tea (no actual tea — chamomile, tulsi): 5% if classified under Chapter 9. Or 18% if classified as 'health drink/preparation' (Chapter 21). Kashmiri Kahwa: 5% (tea-based). Turmeric latte mix: 18% (food preparation). HEALTH DRINKS: Bournvita, Horlicks, Boost: 18% (malted food preparation — HSN 1901). Complan: 18%. Protein shake powder: 18%. Energy drinks (Red Bull, Monster): 28% + cess (aerated beverage). AERATED/CARBONATED BEVERAGES — 28% + Cess: Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Sprite: 28% + 12% cess = 40% effective. Packaged fruit drinks (less than 10% juice content): 28% + 12% cess. Soda water: 28% + 12% cess. Tonic water: 28% + 12% cess. Energy drinks: 28% + 12% cess. FRUIT JUICE — 12%: Fresh fruit juice (packaged): 12% (HSN 2009). Orange juice, apple juice: 12%. Coconut water (packaged): 12%. Mixed fruit juice: 12%. BUT: Fruit juice with added sugar/flavour (fruit drink < 100% juice): Check — if aerated: 28% + cess. If non-aerated (Frooti, Real, Tropicana): 12%. MILK BEVERAGES — 5%: Flavoured milk (Amul Kool): 5% (HSN 0402). Buttermilk (chaas, packaged): 5%. Lassi (packaged): 5%. Plain milk: 0% (exempt). WATER — 18%: Packaged drinking water (Aquafina, Kinley): 18% (HSN 2201). Mineral water: 18%. BUT: Water supplied by municipality: 0% (exempt). Water tanker supply: 0% (essential). The distinction: PACKAGED (sealed bottle/pouch) = 18%. BULK/TANKER = 0%. 20-litre water can (refill): 18% (it's packaged drinking water).
Export of Spices & Zero-Rated Supply
SPICE EXPORTS — ZERO-RATED: All spice exports from India: 0% GST (zero-rated under IGST Act). India's spice exports: ₹30,000+ crore annually (2023-24). Major exported spices: chilli, cumin, turmeric, pepper, cardamom, coriander. Destination markets: USA (25%), China (12%), UAE (10%), UK, Vietnam, Bangladesh. ZERO-RATED vs EXEMPT: Zero-rated: GST rate = 0% BUT exporter can claim REFUND of input taxes. Exempt: GST rate = 0% AND no ITC refund allowed. For exporters: zero-rating is BENEFICIAL (recover all input costs). EXPORT REFUND MECHANISM: Option 1 — Export under Bond/LUT (Letter of Undertaking): Don't pay IGST on export invoice. Claim refund of ACCUMULATED ITC (input taxes on purchases). Faster — no need to pay and then get back. Option 2 — Pay IGST on export: Pay IGST on export invoice (0% effectively through shipping bill). Claim refund of IGST paid. Slower — involves payment and then refund. Most large spice exporters: Use LUT route (Option 1). SPICE BOARD REGISTRATION: Mandatory for spice exporters. Spice Board issues RCMC (Registration Cum Membership Certificate). Required for claiming export benefits (MEIS/RoDTEP). GST registration: separate requirement (GSTIN mandatory for export). ITC ISSUES FOR SPICE EXPORTERS: Purchase from farmers (unregistered): 0% (no ITC). Purchase from APMC mandis: 0% (exempt agricultural). Processing charges: 18% → ITC available. Packaging (export quality): 18% → ITC available. Freight/logistics to port: 18% or 5% (GTA) → ITC available. Cold storage: 18% → ITC available. Quality testing/certification: 18% → ITC available. Fumigation (for export compliance): 18% → ITC available. PRACTICAL CHALLENGE: Large portion of costs have NO ITC (farm purchases). Only processing + packaging + logistics give ITC. Accumulated ITC: relatively small compared to turnover. But still significant for large exporters (crores of refund annually). SEZ SUPPLIES: Supply to SEZ (Special Economic Zone): zero-rated (same as export). SEZ units processing spices for export: zero-rated procurement. ITC refund: same mechanism as exports. E-COMMERCE EXPORTS (Spices on Amazon Global): Individual sellers exporting spices via e-commerce: Same zero-rating applies. Must have GST registration + IEC (Import Export Code). Amazon handles shipping but seller files GST. LUT required for zero-rated supply. Small spice sellers on Amazon/eBay global: Often below ₹40 lakh threshold → register voluntarily for export benefits. Even if below threshold: REGISTER (to claim ITC refund). BRAND PROTECTION FOR EXPORTS: GI-tagged spices: Malabar Pepper (Kerala). Byadgi Chilli (Karnataka). Alleppey Green Cardamom. Guntur Sannam Chilli. GI tag: no impact on GST rate (still 5% domestic / 0% export). But adds premium value and prevents misuse of origin name.
Spices & Condiments — GST Rate Table
| Item | HSN / SAC | GST Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whole spices (loose/unpackaged) | 0904-0910 | 0% | EXEMPT — agricultural produce |
| Whole spices (pre-packaged & labelled) | 0904-0910 | 5% | Post July 2022 rule |
| Single spice powder (turmeric, chilli) | 0910 | 5% | Ground/processed spice |
| Blended masala powder (garam masala) | 0910 | 5% | Mixed spice preparations |
| Pickles (all varieties) | 2001 | 12% | Preserved vegetables in vinegar/oil |
| Sauces (ketchup, soy, chilli) | 2103 | 12% | All prepared sauces |
| Mayonnaise & emulsified sauces | 2103 | 18% | Creamy/oil-based sauces |
| Common salt (all edible salt) | 2501 | 0% | EXEMPT — essential commodity |
| Edible oils (all types) | 1507-1515 | 5% | Mustard, sunflower, coconut etc. |
| Tea (all varieties) | 0902 | 5% | Green, black, herbal (with tea) |
| Coffee (beans, powder, instant) | 0901 | 5% | All forms of coffee |
| Vinegar (all types) | 2209 | 18% | Apple cider, white, balsamic |
Frequently Asked Questions
What changed for spice sellers after the July 2022 GST amendment on pre-packaged goods?
I manufacture pickles and sauces. How do I handle the 12% vs 18% classification and claim ITC?
What's the GST on restaurant spice supplies vs retail spice sales? How do caterers handle it?
How does GST apply to organic and specialty spices? Is there any rate benefit for organic certification?
Spices & Condiments GST — Classification, Export Refunds & Compliance
Laabam.One handles spice industry GST: multi-rate classification (0-5-12-18%), pre-packaged labelling compliance post-July 2022, pickle/sauce manufacturer ITC optimization, spice export zero-rating with LUT, inverted duty refund filing, and organic certification documentation.
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